Jump to content

Introduction to Personal Income Tax in Thailand


Message added by CharlieH,

Notice to Members:

Posts made by individuals reflect their own opinions and should not be taken as fact.

Please draw your own conclusions and consult a qualified professional before acting on any such advice or content.

Recommended Posts

15 minutes ago, Unamerican said:

Maybe, but difficult to know this when the acronym is unknown to many of us!  Where does it come from? 

Note that the only response that was in fact needed was an  explanation that it is the acronym for: 

TAX EXEMPTIONS DEDUCTIONS & ALLOWANCES

Which is far more understandable than TEDA.

 

So “thanks, but not an at all useful response”! 

On the first page of the document I pointed you at, it says this:

 

TAX EXEMPTIONS DEDUCTIONS & ALLOWANCES (TEDA) 

 

So I think my response was useful and I did answer your question!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, chiang mai said:

I think my response was useful and I did answer your question!

Think away!  I am sure that everything you do is totally perfect . . . in your eyes!   

 

So very, very, very many thanks for your  totally perfect reply . . .  which could readily have simply been writing out the full form of the acronym!

 

One more thought, maybe simply decoding the acronym would have made it into a superb,  totally complete, and excellent answer . . . maybe??? 

Edited by Unamerican
  • Sad 2
  • Thumbs Up 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, Unamerican said:

Think away!  I am sure that everything you do is totally perfect . . . in your eyes!   

 

So very, very, very many thanks for your  totally perfect reply . . .  which could readily have simply been writing out the full form of the acronym!

 

One more thought, maybe simply decoding the acronym would have made it into a superb,  totally complete, and excellent answer . . . maybe??? 

Welcome to my ignore list, bye.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On 11/12/2024 at 3:56 PM, chiang mai said:

It has been widely acknowledged in many of the video's and interviews I have seen it said several times that TRD HQ has done a poor job of communicating to the regions 

 

Do not agree this is 'widely acknowledged'. Consider, this may be simply intentional, and there is nothing new to communicate.

 

If the TRD was even remotely serious about collecting/enforcing foreign remitted income for the 100's of 1000's of expats who have never paid it before, they would need to do a lot more than publish 2 internal directives, & 1 infographic.
 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, anrcaccount said:

 

Do not agree this is 'widely acknowledged'. Consider, this may be simply intentional, and there is nothing new to communicate.

 

If the TRD was even remotely serious about collecting/enforcing foreign remitted income for the 100's of 1000's of expats who have never paid it before, they would need to do a lot more than publish 2 internal directives, & 1 infographic.
 

If I said it was November 2024, you'd disagree, I've been conditioned to realise this is true.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

10 hours ago, anrcaccount said:

 

Do not agree this is 'widely acknowledged'. Consider, this may be simply intentional, and there is nothing new to communicate.

 

If the TRD was even remotely serious about collecting/enforcing foreign remitted income for the 100's of 1000's of expats who have never paid it before, they would need to do a lot more than publish 2 internal directives, & 1 infographic.
 

TRD changed one simple rule regarding remittances, the implications of the change are that foreign tax resident no longer have a loop hole through which to avoid Thai tax on remittances.  The rule change  was widely broadcast and is simple enough to understand, even for dullards and those people who are not tax savvy.

 

Put yourself in TRDs shoes, what more can you reasonably expect TRD to feel the need to do. What justification is there for TRD to pander to the anxieties and insecurities of the foreign community? The Revenue rules are there, in English and there's lots of ways you can get assistance with tax. International and local tax consultants operate here and English is widely spoken. 100's of 1000's of foreigners may not have paid Thai tax before but they know what tax is and they've certainly paid it in their home country, this is not something that is uniquely Thai that they've never heard of before. 

 

Many foreigners were required to file tax returns before the rule change but didn't, because they didn't think it applied to them! Now, many more foreigners are required to file tax returns, I'm pretty certain that fewer people will ignore the need this time around!!  

 

The private sector picked up on the potential for increased tax consultancy fees and has marketed their tax advisory services by providing tax information, aggressively....social media is awash with information on the subject. What exactly could TRD do to reinforce the message that they're serious about this, perhaps take out half page ads in the Bangkok Post saying, we're not joking!

 

No, this is your problem, not the TRD's. If you're expecting a last minute change of heart or for this whole business to go silent and die a death, you are grasping at straws. And those people who are waiting for personalised letters to appear in the mail giving individual instructions regarding what to do, well, words fail me on this point.

  • Like 1
  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 hours ago, chiang mai said:

Many foreigners were required to file tax returns before the rule change but didn't, because they didn't think it applied to them! Now, many more foreigners are required to file tax returns, I'm pretty certain that fewer people will ignore the need this time around!!  

Without doubt there will be increasingly more foreigner residents who will file a tax return thanks to because of the scaremongering propaganda pushed here and there. Still, in my opinion, the big majority of this population will not be making themselves aware to the TRD, awaiting to see concrete tax enforcement (audit + penalties) broadly happening to individuals in the real world.

  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 minutes ago, Yumthai said:

Without doubt there will be increasingly more foreigner residents who will file a tax return thanks to because of the scaremongering propaganda pushed here and there. Still, in my opinion, the big majority of this population will not be making themselves aware to the TRD, awaiting to see concrete tax enforcement (audit + penalties) broadly happening to individuals in the real world.

To summarise, many wont follow the law, until such time as it becomes too high risk not to.....gottit.

 

Some people won't want to wait that long, I suspect!

 

Plus I suspect that if there is not a decent voluntary take up initially, that will only accelerate the inevitable, which could easily be draconian measures associated with visa's. Ask your self, what would you do in their shoes.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 minutes ago, chiang mai said:

To summarise, many wont follow the law, until such time as it becomes too high risk not to.....gottit.

This is where we differ. Unlike you, my tax enforcement risk assessment is low.

 

9 minutes ago, chiang mai said:

Some people won't want to wait that long, I suspect!

Agreed. I suspect "some will" is more important than "some won't".

 

9 minutes ago, chiang mai said:

Plus I suspect that if there is not a decent voluntary take up initially, that will only accelerate the inevitable, which could easily be draconian measures associated with visa's. Ask your self, what would you do in their shoes.

If I were in their shoes and want my country grows, I won't try to enforce foreign sourced income tax on temporary foreigner residents as it's as unfair as totally economically unproductive.

  • Agree 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

18 minutes ago, chiang mai said:

To summarise, many wont follow the law, until such time as it becomes too high risk not to.....gottit.

 

Some people won't want to wait that long, I suspect!

 

Plus I suspect that if there is not a decent voluntary take up initially, that will only accelerate the inevitable, which could easily be draconian measures associated with visa's. Ask your self, what would you do in their shoes.

A pointless speculative post!

I thought this thread was about "FACTS"!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, scottiejohn said:

A pointless speculative post!

I thought this thread was about "FACTS"!

No, you are very confused if you think that. At the top of the thread is this, "Posts made by individuals reflect their own opinions and should not be taken as fact". Let me know if you need further help.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

21 minutes ago, Yumthai said:

This is where we differ. Unlike you, my tax enforcement risk assessment is low.

 

Agreed. I suspect "some will" is more important than "some won't".

 

If I were in their shoes and want my country grows, I won't try to enforce foreign sourced income tax on temporary foreigner residents as it's as unfair as totally economically unproductive.

If none of these threads had taken place, everyone would know far less than they do today. But because they did take place, people can make informed decisions about they think they should do. Either way, everyone would arrive at the same point eventually, one way is with the benefit of knowledge and time, the other is reactive and in a rush and panic. 

 

Tell me, in what country that you've lived in is tax enforcement not a significant risk and why do you think that Thailand should be any different!

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, chiang mai said:

in what country that you've lived in is tax enforcement not a significant risk and why do you think that Thailand should be any different!

You're right. In the US, if you owe taxes, but don't pay, or under pay, you're subject to fines. If, however, you've overwithheld on your income, or over paid estimated taxes -- and thus don't owe any taxes -- you're free not to file a tax return (unless some of your income is from self-employment). This is why I've got it set up, that when I die, the withholding on the income going to my wife will have a sufficient overwithholding pad to mean she owes no taxes. Thus, dear, you don't need to file anything. And that lost $400 in overwithholding is about what you'd have to pay to hire a US tax guy here in Thailand -- a nice wash, with no effort. The IRS will know, by her 1099s, what was withheld, and what was thus not owed. And the pad I've built in will cover any interest earned here in Thailand, which, of course, wouldn't have a 1099.

 

For Thai taxes? Right now, her retirement income would be assessable, if remitted. But it's not remitted -- it's reinvested in the US. But, if we go to worldwide taxation, it would become taxable by Thailand -- and it exceeds 60,000 (the magic number for supposedly needing to file). But, after TEDA, it would be 400,000 short of being taxable income, i.e., no taxes owed, no tax evasion occurring. So, dear -- don't worry about filing a Thai tax return either.

 

So, yeah, "tax enforcement is a significant risk" -- if you OWE taxes. If not, don't bother to file, unless you want the overwithholding refunded. Another case of "common sense." But, just to be safe -- I'll have my ashes scattered on the TRD parking lot.

 

But, flippancy aside -- I really believe my tax plan for my wife -- who would be completely lost, even in gathering forms to give to a tax accountant -- is sound -- because if you don't owe any taxes, you haven't evaded taxation. Thus, no law infringement. And -- at least in the US -- there are absolutely no penalties for not filing, if no taxes owed (except self-employed). Thailand? Maybe an unlikely 2000 baht fine. Ho hum. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 minutes ago, anrcaccount said:

 

No, 'everyone' wouldn't arrive at the same point eventually. 

 

These threads, or similarly trusting the advice/consultancy of 'expat' tax advisors (which is apparently technically illegal)  have caused some people to:

 

Firstly, waste their time & energy - by trying to self file and in many cases being denied even getting a TIN.

Secondly, next year when/if they do manage to file DIY, or one of the (IMO predatory) agencies does it for them - they have wasted their money. 
 

Those who didn't read them, continue to not file, as they have not filed for many years, with no consequences, and have not wasted their time nor money. 

 

 

 

Thailand has had minimal/no tax enforcement on foreigners for many years despite many technically being liable.

 

There is no indication yet, this will change.  So, it is not a significant risk currently. 

You've become a joke, you do realise, every single thing I post you have to disagree with and refute.

Edited by chiang mai
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, chiang mai said:

Tell me, in what country that you've lived in is tax enforcement not a significant risk and why do you think that Thailand should be any different!

Maybe because in some other countries I've lived people couldn't bypass rules simply using legal loopholes, workarounds via agents or "flexible" public servants.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, chiang mai said:

You've become a joke, you do realise, every single thing I post you have to disagree with and refute.

Because he disagrees with everything you post -- makes him a joke!?. I say it makes him astute, in most cases. Get rid of the thin skin -- and build in a little flexibility, when other's ideas don't match yours.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now




×
×
  • Create New...